While not strictly defined, Mando’a sentence structure appears to generally be setup very similar to Basic. At the same time, the most important part of written or spoken Mando’a is clarity, so your word order should convey meaning to the reader or listener, even if it doesn’t fit this structure.

Hopefully more soon.

Admin's note: I edited this post to point the above links at their archived copies on Archive.Org

Last edited by Adi'karta on 05 Jan 2016 22:26, edited 9 times in total.
Reason:Made it better

Before I write anything else, I'm going to give a short explination.Mando'a is essentially either a very simple language or an extremely complicated code. It just depends on how you treat it. It has identical rules to that of Basic except where outlined above, and probably won't be getting any very soon. So, the best way to learn Mando'a after you've got an understanding of what I've written in the last two lessons is to start using it.

I personally write my journal in Mando'a (my thoughts are safer than if locked up). I encourage you to do something. Read existing Mando'a text. Translate something. Write a book, poem, or song. Teach your friends. Whatever. By simply using it you will begin learning it.

That out of the way, here are the most commonly used Mando'a words. They're a great foundation to build your vocabulary on.